86 , "" ',. ",:,"".'? ;:-.{ ,:" "'. ,:." -- " 1( " . .. .... .....".....,. . '.... "" Id ' .. 't ...... ""', ..'..'...--'" U ...'.::'.'.'.. ""' 0 ' O ......w'. , ". 0 , u ..... ...... D . . . O ... ",.. .:.. :::,.yy:,":' .. " " " t ' : h " " ;" :',:, .' . ,, ' I :' íI : J , <: .'. . Ä"""'" "" ";>" ;; . "'. .. e ..'.'.' w .' o .. r . S ": - . .....-: : ".". _0" _":: .:. .> .: _'. .:: ...... ..--.... '". '". ::: ::....::>...-- :....".. '. '. ::',:\ ..':,:::",..... ,.::.. '.'. .. ".::,,:. ::' ". ,...' -- .. .. '.., he ' If '.... -- .," , ' , oldest,.., 'I$,, èY"; u,l1ts out to be' rish1 The Irish are full of surprises. The most delightful one is this exceptîonaHy smooth, light-bodied whiskey made to the formula that captured Irish hearts long ago. Bushmills retains the same delicate flavor and taste today that's made it a legend. Tonight enjoy the luck of the Irish in a Bushmills straight, or in a Whiskey Sour. Just as it s been enjoyed since 1608. Genuine Id . ... . '90 ^ t... .,f&, I v' .::-:.... , ... , .::.. ,.> ..- "'. ." :i:.. J' ....:. ì. :::::: . :::. (D f)oC ,l . fOR 150 YEARS ! . o "''' ' . . ' *- ':' * ) 1 :::! A .-< . ,- OLD BUSHMILLS ; . ^ IRISH WHISKEY . A BLEND _ N)1. \ \SH WHISlril'. i. v Â $1; [S íìii 11e.. ' "1.f;.HOtO ...O'J'h..t()-..... (81 & llIulls ' '" Tcn $RMf @ "- UttLANO ._'- .... -cOtotTr..rs 4/5 Q<jAR1 . !(J / ::. A blend of 100% Irish Whiskies. 86 proof. Bottled in Ireland Quality Importers, Inc., New York. .þ We've had a lot of trouble with our Avant Espresso@ Trouble keepi ng it in stock. Men see. . . try. . . buy. . . enjoy. . . then tell their friends! Naturally. Avant has ma ny merits . . . the Conti nenta I look . . . flexi bl e Loaflex@ construction. . . and a hidden stretch gore for slip-on, slip-off convenience. Avant keeps your feet looking right, feeling great. . . no matter how active you are. AVANT. Luxurious shrunken calf uppers in our exclusive Bluegrass shade, or black About $39 ,/ ;f . . / .v:, .j/i' >' ' .f , . "" '1t )-. """ - 'þ ); ... .:." I: ../ 1- < >{ " r ><s 1-' LJlW'" . ) / !:- \ i ':.\ \ I Write for our new Style Folder #679 and name of your nearest Nettleton dealer. A good booklet to have and a good man to know. A. E. NETTLETON CO . SYRACUSE, NEW YORK 1967 AMERICAN SHOE DESIGNER AWARD WINNER district-a one-room shack set in one of the countless slums of the city that are washed by open draIns. The rally is heralded by the setting up of a canopy behind the shack and by the monoto- nous th udding of a drum, but there is no sIgn of a crowd when I arrIve, though it is past the announced time for the rally to begin. In the shack, on <:1 straigh t-hacked metal chair behInd a small metal table, a woman in a white cotton sari sits facing the door; behind her is a half-curtained-off bed. She IS the doctor In charge of the center. Though she has a workmanlike air about her, she is clearly bedevilled by troubles. "Fifteen years, twenty-six ,w.. ",', billion rupees, and the effort of three Five Year Plans have al1 achieved nothing," she tells me. "Steriliza- tion, we were told, would be the answer, but in the past eleven years we have been able to operate on only a mi]- lion fathers. There are not enough doc- tors; even the best surgeons can't do more than a few operations a day. Everything else is in short supply, too. Anyway, villagers associate steriliza- tion with castration, so most of them won't hear of the operation. Now it is the intrauterine contraceptive device that we are told is the answer. In the past five months-since the program was started, in July-three hundred thousand insertions have been made, at governmen t expense. I have done ninety-two myself. In every case, there has been bleeding. Just today, I have had a total of five patients, and I have had to remove the I. U.C.D.s from three of them, because of the bleeding. In other countries, bleeding has been reported In less than five per cent of the " cases. "How do you explain the discíep- ancy? " I ask. "Our women bleed because they are anemic, and they are anemic because they have nothing to eat, and they have nothing to eat because they have too many children. It is a vicious circle. What can be done?" (Later, I dis- cover that another woman doctor, Usha Dey, who is in charge of an urban family-planning clinic in another part of India, regards bleeding as nothing more than a passing occurrence. Report- ing in the Journal of the Indian M f'di- cal Association, she writes that her clinical experience disclosed that bleed- ing-minor, moderate, or severe-was "the common symptom for whIch pa- . h d . " b h " h tlents soug t a VIce ut t at suc symptoms were not serious and were relieved with treatment" She simply advises Iron for the anemic patients and says that "heavy doses of vitamins C